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A BERKELEY ACTIVIST'S DIARY: week ending October 29

Kelly Hammargren
Monday October 30, 2023 - 06:22:00 PM

I often think I should approach writing the Activist’s Diary like plein air painting by picking a .point in time and stopping, but the world and the City keep moving on while I write. 

I finished Naomi Klein’s book Doppelganger just two weeks before the Hamas attack on Israel. Doppelganger starts with Klein describing her “double” with whom she is often confused, Naomi Wolf, who has taken a hard right turn. In the book Klein recounts her trip to Gaza and compares the treatment of the Palestinians by Israel to the displacement and genocide of the American Indigenous People in the United States. 

At the beginning of the week the death toll in Gaza was 5,791 of whom 2,360 were children. After President Joe Biden doubt about the number of deaths, the Gaza Health Ministry published on October 26, 2023 a 212-page list of over 6700 dead Palestinians by name, age, gender and ID number. 2665 were children. The list does not contain the names of 281 who could not be identified. As I write there is more bombing and more names to be added. https://www.democracynow.org/2023/10/27/headlines/gaza_health_ministry_publishes_names_of_nearly_7_000_palestinians_killed_in_israeli_strikes 

The residents of Gaza are running out of food, water, medicine and fuel and Israel has shut off power and communications. The few aid convoys into Gaza before this latest siege were wholly inadequate for what is needed for 2.2 million people. Twenty-nine journalists are confirmed dead:bb 24 Palestinian, 1 Lebanese, and 4 Israeli. Eight journalists were reported injured and 9 were reported missing or detained. Last night I heard that the injured at the hospital in Gaza City numbered 19,000. 

Will all the Israeli retaliation under the banner of turning Hamas to dust end terrorism? I doubt it. The horror raining down on Gaza, the massive destruction by Israel, the thousands dead and injured bring only more terror. It is not war crimes it is that war is the crime. I believe it was Howard Zinn who said that first. 

In some parts of the country, calling for a ceasefire, ending the blockade to Palestine has meant being doxed, fired, nasty emails, posts, being called anti-Semitic and death threats. But now the pictures and reports coming out of Gaza look like a genocide of the Palestinians and the demonstrations calling for a cease-fire are growing around the world and here too. And yes, I sent off my ceasefire contact letters to the President, U.S. Senators and Barbara Lee. 

Tuesday was book club. We chose The Hundred Years' War on Palestine: A History of Settler Colonialism and Resistance, 1917 - 2017 by Rashid Khalidi for January. 

The new speaker of the House Mike Johnson is a self-described Evangelical Christian in the Southern Baptist tradition who said “My faith informs everything I do.” Johnson previously worked as senior attorney and spokesperson for Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF) a Southern Poverty Law Center designated hate group. 

When I downloaded Robert P. Jones’ book White Too Long: The Legacy of White Supremacy in American Christianity, I never expected that the new speaker of the House would be coming out of the tradition of which Jones writes (religion, politics and culture including the Evangelical Christian in the Southern Baptist tradition). The book covers how deeply white supremacy is embedded in white Christianity especially the Southern Baptist and Evangelical churches in the South. Jones goes into detail in how the Daughters of the Confederacy embedded teaching children in the “Lost Cause” mirroring religious studies at church and Sunday school with lessons, holidays and celebrations of the Confederacy. 

The book is fascinating. I never knew the National Cathedral had four stained-glass windows honoring the Confederate Generals Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson (1953-2017) donated by the Daughters of the Confederacy. Those windows were replaced in 2017 (before my first visit) with racial justice themed stained-glass windows. 

My copy of the book was from the Contra Costa County Library. There are four people in line for the one copy at the San Francisco Library and no copies that I could find in Berkeley. 

If you are not up for a book or already in overload, Katelyn Fossett’s October 27, 2023 interview with Kristin Kobes Du Mez (author of Jesus and John Wayne) on Mike Johnson will give you a peak into what is ahead. https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2023/10/27/mike-johnson-christian-nationalist-ideas-qa-00123882 

On to the week in Berkeley. 

Monday afternoon four of us attending the Agenda and Rules Committee spoke to our concerns regarding item 22 in the draft agenda for November 7, 2023. 

“22. Modernizing and updating outdated & unnecessary language in the BMC related to transportation  

From: Councilmember Rigel Robinson  

Recommendation: Adopt first reading of an Ordinance amending BMC Chapters 6.32, 1432 and 14.68 to: 1. Rescind outdated or unnecessary regulations pertaining to jaywalking, skateboarding, bicycle licenses and bicycle establishment requirements, 2. Allow 24/7 use of public paths by pedestrians and cyclists for the purpose of transportation; 3. Allow bicyclists on non-electric bicycles to ride on the sidewalk while exercising due care and yielding right-of-way to pedestrians when no Class I, Class II, or Class IV bicycle facility is available; 4. Align the penalty for bicycle violations with other moving violations by amending it from a misdemeanor to an infraction; 5. Update definitions of bicycles and scooters to align with definitions in the California Vehicle Code.” [emphasis added] 

There was not one peep out of Mayor Arreguin and Councilmember Sophie Hahn who were up first in making comments on the draft agenda. When it was finally Councilmember Wengraf’s turn to speak she suggested that Robinson’s item 22 go to a policy committee before it went to the Transportation and Infrastructure Commission. The policy committee suggested was Facilities, Infrastructure, Transportation, Environment and Sustainability (FITES) with Councilmembers Harrison as chair with Robinson and Taplin and Humbert as the alternate. 

After Wengraf started the discussion of pulling the item 22 from the November 7 agenda and sending it to committee, then Hahn and Arreguin joined in suggesting that the item should go to the Commission on Aging and the Commission on Disability. The final motion by Hahn was “to recommend to the author [Robinson] that they amend the item to include a referral to the Disability, Aging and Transportation and Infrastructure Commissions.” The annotated agenda listed only commissions and not those specifically named in the motion.  

The special City Council meeting on the Waterfront Specific Plan on November 2 was still on the schedule, but it was cancelled later with a new proposed date of January 23, 2024. 

Monday evening the Berkeley Neighborhoods Council sponsored the presentation by Kristina Hill on “Contaminated Sites and Sea Level Rise – Preparing for Change.” Hill explained (with diagrams) how groundwater sits on top of the denser salty sea water and seeps into capped contaminated sites with sea level rise. Levees will not stop the groundwater rise. 

In the Q & A, one person asked about the flooding at the Coliseum Connections Housing Project in East Oakland. Hill said she warned that the project would sit on a dry creek bed, a disaster waiting to happen. 

Right now, Berkeley is in the middle of rezoning the low-lying West Berkeley contaminated Steel Casting site for a large biolab campus. The environmental impact report (EIR) is underway. The plan as of this week is still to cap the contaminated site. 

You can pick up the link for the webinar from the Berkeley Neighborhoods Council home page at https://berkeleyneighborhoodscouncil.com/ 

or go directly to the webinar at https://tinyurl.com/2s4uuzbf 

The 4 x 4 Committee met on the demolition ordinance. The subject of the ordinance is protections for the renters who are displaced by the demolition of the unit they are renting or the loss of a rental unit through elimination or conversion of a unit within a building. The protections include moving and relocation location assistance, first right of refusal when new building is completed, rental differential assistance in specified circumstances for example when household income falls below 50% of the AMI (area median income). 

The definition of the dwelling units covered includes just about everything , even non-permitted dwellings as long as they are registered with the Rent Board, also ADUs and JADUs. The exceptions are group living accommodations in a University recognized sorority or fraternity and a single-family house. 

The plan for the demolition ordinance passed by the 4 x 4 Committee on October 24, 2023, is to go to the Planning Commission, Housing Advisory Commissions and City Council before the 

Middle Housing Ordinance reaches the City Council. 

The discussion of the proposal for Middle Housing is before the Planning Commission on November 1. The goal of Middle Housing, which includes duplexes, triplexes fourplexes and small buildings, is to increase density in all areas of Berkeley (R-1, R-2, R-2A, MU-R) except the Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zones. The theory is that Middle Housing besides being “middle in size” will be naturally affordable. 

The proposal includes things like by-right demolition of single-family houses, removal of the minimum size restrictions of units, and reducing the amount of open space. The proposed ordinance was presented to the Berkeley Neighborhoods Council on October 14. You can see that recording at: https://berkeleyneighborhoodscouncil.com/ 

Fire Chief Sprague presented the Fiscal Year 2023 in Review and the Fiscal Year 2024 Goals to the Disaster and Fire Safety Commission on Wednesday. 

I caught up with my neighbor who was also at the meeting the next day to compare notes. We were both totally impressed by Sprague’s one hour and twenty-minute presentation and shuddered every time he mentioned succession and leadership planning. We wondered how long Berkeley would be able to keep someone this qualified. 

The thrust of the presentation is that Berkeley is no longer a suburban city. Berkeley is the second most dense city of the 51 most populated cities in California. San Francisco is number one. The Fire Department resources in staff, fire fighters, equipment and facilities are not equipped for the dense city we have become with high-rises replacing single family housing, one and two-story commercial buildings and low-rise multi-unit buildings. Plus, the very high fire hazard severity zones are densely populated. 

Sprague’s goal of returning wildland to native vegetation made this attendee very happy. 

Sprague expects that when the evacuation emergency access study is completed next year more areas will be designated as the very highest fire risk, what we now call Fire Zone 3 or ES-R (Environmental Safety-Residential District) like Panoramic Hill. Sprague also said if Panoramic Hill is being evacuated from an oncoming fire, then we have failed. Panoramic Hill residents need to evacuate in advance. 

When Mayor Arreguin states his vision of adding 15,000 units to Berkeley, which if filled would add around 30,000 to 40,000 people, never have I heard that goal accompanied by the information that to have adequate services and response times Berkeley needs to upgrade and properly staff the dispatch center (think 911), add ambulances, firefighters, EMTs, replace four fire stations with new facilities and renovate three. Nor do those statements that are so appealing to the building industry endorsements he is courting inform us that the needed investment of renovating three fire stations, replacing four stations, new headquarters and the training center comes with a $330 milliion - $372 million price tag. This does not include the dispatch center. 

The presentation starts on page 15 in the Disaster and Fire Safety Commission packet for the October 25, 2023 meeting. https://berkeleyca.gov/your-government/boards-commissions/disaster-and-fire-safety-commission 

No votes were taken on the AAO#! (Annual Appropriations Ordinance aka Fall Budget Adjustment) at the Budget Committee. However, before any more budget referrals are added, the spending requests total $38,805,924 and the available funds are $13,945,878. 

The Zoning Adjustment Board (ZAB) was the last City meeting I attended for the week. Nature lost in the 600 Addison Street biolab building appeal. The appeal of the sign approved by the Design Review Committee (DRC) to the Zoning Adjustment Board was that the height and lighting of the signage was in conflict with the City Sign Ordinance. The DRC Secretary Anne Burns confessed to incorrectly informing the DRC members that the sign was in compliance with the Sign Ordinance when it wasn’t. 

The developer gave the song and dance of how the signage wasn’t really advertising, that the lights would be shut off from 10 pm to 5 am and would meet the Dark Skies Initiative, ignoring that unnecessary night light is in conflict with the Dark Skies Initiative and detrimental to nature. The vote was 7 to 2 in favor of the sign. The ZAB was more moved by the DRC secretary confessing to providing incorrect direction to committee members, than that the sign was in conflict with the ordinance. 

The last project was to request five additional parking spaces for the 2403-2407 San Pablo multi-unit project. There was a back and forth until finally the five spaces were approved in a 7 to 2 vote. It is quite amazing how the Berkeley electeds and appointeds are quick to prohibit parking at large multi-unit housing projects and perfectly willing to approve 943 parking spaces for 600 Addison and large parking lots for other biolab buildings. 

The San Pablo project will be condominiums. Maybe the Panoramic Hill resident who commented at the Disaster and Fire Safety Commission meeting that he absolutely must have [street] parking for his car or he couldn’t live on Panoramic Hill should take a look at the condominiums on San Pablo. It’s a nice project and not in ES-r/Fire Zone 3. 

It is impossible to attend every meeting. I missed the Rent board, Loan Administration Board, Solano Business Improvement District, the Zero Waste Commission, the Civic arts Commission, the Police Accountability Board, the Community Forum on the Berkeley Marina and the Community Health Commission. 

I did make it to the forum with State Senate Candidate Dan Kalb on Saturday. That was the third and final planned forum with State Senate Candidates sponsored by East Bay Community for Action. The great thing about each of these forums was we had just one candidate at a time with ample time to ask a wide variety of unscreened, unfiltered questions. I took pages and pages of notes at each forum and will send a summary in the next Activist’s Diary. The other two forums were with the candidates Kathryn Lybarger and Jovanka Beckles. 

 

 

 


THE BERKELEY ACTIVIST'S CALENDAR;Oct. 29-Nov.6

Kelly Hammargren
Saturday October 28, 2023 - 08:44:00 PM

Worth Noting:

The last day for members to join the Sierra Club to be able to vote in the Sierra Club election is October 31st. https://www.sierraclub.org/ways-to-give#renew-maintab

Responsibilities of the persons elected include: local conservation policies, administering programs and activities and endorsing political candidates and ballot initiatives. Please join or if you are already a member check to make sure your membership is current. The election bulletin of candidates and ballot will be sent in the Winter edition of the Sierra Club Yodeler.

  • Monday:
    • At 2:30 pm the Agenda and Rules Committee meets in the hybrid format.
    • Cancelled and rescheduled for November 6 at 7 pm the Homeless Panel of Experts Subcommittee on guidelines and policies for homeless encampment meets in person.
  • Tuesday: celebrate Halloween
  • Wednesday:
    • At 2 pm the Facilities, Infrastructure, Transportation, Environment and Sustainability Committee meets in the hybrid format.
    • At 5:30 pm the Planning Commission meets in person on “Middle Housing.”
    • At 6:30 pm Board of Library trustees meets in person.
  • Thursday:
    • At 7 pm the Housing advisory Commission meets in person.
    • At 7 pm the Landmarks Preservation Board meets in person.
    • At 7 pm the Landmarks Preservation Commission meets in person.
    • The City Council meeting on the Waterfront Specific Plan was cancelled and is tentatively rescheduled for January 23, 2024.
Check the City website for late announcements and meetings posted on short notice at: https://berkeleyca.gov/

Activist’s Diary for October 15, 2023 https://www.berkeleydailyplanet.com/issue/2023-10-23/article/50450?headline=A-BERKELEY-ACTIVIST-S-DIARY.-week-ending-Oct.15--Kelly-Hammargren

Two more editions of the Activist’s Diary are in the works.

The link to the recording of the Kristina Hill webinar on Contaminated Sites and Sea Level Rise is posted https://berkeleyneighborhoodscouncil.com/

Directions with links to ZOOM support for activating Closed Captioning and Save Transcript are at the bottom of this calendar along with how to change a YouTube video to a readable transcript.



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BERKELEY PUBLIC MEETINGS AND CIVIC EVENTS 

 

Sunday, October 29, 2023 – No City meetings or events found 

 

Monday, October 30, 2023 

 

AGENDA AND RULES COMMITTEE Meeting at 2:30 pm 

Hybrid Meeting 

In-Person: at 2180 Milvia, 6th Floor – Redwood Room 

Videoconference: https://cityofberkeley-info.zoomgov.com/j/1602118494 

Teleconference: 1-669-254-5252 or 1-833-568-8864 (Toll Free)  

Meeting ID: 160 211 8494 

AGENDA: Public Comment on non-agenda and items 1 – 7. 1. Minutes, 2. Review and Approve -11/14/2023 draft agenda – use link or read full draft agenda below at the end of the list of city meetings, 3. Berkeley Considers, 4. Adjournment in Memory, 5. Council Workssessions, 6. Referrals for scheduling, 7. Land Use Calendar, Referred Items for Review: 8. Discussion and Possible Action on City Council Rules of Decorum and Remote Public Comments 9. City Council Legislative Systems Redesign, Unscheduled Items: 10. Modifications or Improvements to City Council Meeting Procedures, 11. Strengthening and Supporting City Commission: Guidance on Development of Legislative Proposals, 12. Discussion and recommendations on the Continued Use of the Berkeley Considers Online Engagement Portal. 

https://berkeleyca.gov/your-government/city-council/council-committees/policy-committee-agenda-rules 

 

HOMELESS SERVICES PANEL of EXPERTS Subcommittee on HOMELESS ENCAMPMENT GUIDELINES at 7 pm – cancelled rescheduled for November 6.  

NOTE: the subcommittee meetings are not posted on the Berkeley City website  

https://berkeleyca.gov/your-government/boards-commissions/homeless-services-panel-experts 

 

Tuesday, October 31, 2023 

Halloween, no city meetings, but events can be found on the city website at https://berkeleyca.gov/ 

 

Wednesday, November 1, 2023 

 

FACILITIES, INFRASTRUCTURE, TRANSPORTATION, ENVIRONMENT & SUSTAINABILITY at 2 pm 

A Hybrid Meeting 

In-Person: at 2180 Milvia, 6th Floor – Redwood Room 

Videoconference: https://cityofberkeley-info.zoomgov.com/j/1606230651 

Teleconference: 1-669-254-5252 or 1-833-568-8864 (toll free) 

Meeting ID: 160 623 0651 

AGENDA: 2. Klein, Planning and Development – Building Emissions Saving Ordinance (BESO) – Time of Sale Energy Upgrades, 3. Adopt an Ordinance adding BMC Chapter 12.39 to regulate Deconstruction and Construction Materials Management. 

https://berkeleyca.gov/your-government/city-council/council-committees/policy-committee-facilities-infrastructure-transportation-environment-sustainability 

 

PLANNING COMMISSION at 5:30 pm 

In-Person: at 1901 Hearst, North Berkeley Senior Center 

AGENDA: 10. Public Hearing on Tentative Tract Map 8651 to convert sole ownership of 36 dwellings/82 beds to individual ownership, 11. Discussion on Middle Housing to encourage middle housing in low-density residential districts (R-1, R-2, R-2A and MU-R) proposal includes by-right demolition of existing single family housing to build duplexes, triplexes, 4-plexes and small projects. 

https://berkeleyca.gov/your-government/boards-commissions/planning-commission 

 

BOARD of LIBRARY TRUSTEES (BOLT) at 6:30 pm 

In-Person: at 1125 University, West Branch Library 

AGENDA: II. A. Presentations Oral Staff Report from Chenice Jackson, Social services Specialist, IV. A. Budget Process Update for FY 2025 & FY 2026 Biennial Budget, B. Amending BOLT bylaws. 

https://www.berkeleypubliclibrary.org/about/board-library-trustees 

 

Thursday, November 2, 2023 

 

HOUSING ADVISORY COMMISSION at 7 pm 

In-Person: at 2939 Ellis, South Berkeley Senior Center 

AGENDA: 6. Presentation on Block Grant funded subrecipient Center for Independent Living residential Access, discussion and possible action on 7. Funding for MLK House, 8. Fair access and Transparency for Rental Housing applications Ordinance, 9. Meeting Calendar, 10. 2024 RFP for Funding Community agencies. 

https://berkeleyca.gov/your-government/boards-commissions/housing-advisory-commission 

 

LANDMARKS PRESERVATION COMMISSION at 7 pm 

In-Person: at 1901 Hearst, North Berkeley Senior Center 

AGENDA: 6. 2119 Marin, Laflin House – Structural Alteration Permit 

7. 910 Indian Rock - Landmark or Structure of Merit Designation 

8. 1840 Woolsey – Staff-level Design Review Referral – provide comments on exterior alterations. 

https://berkeleyca.gov/your-government/boards-commissions/landmarks-preservation-commission 

 

PERSONNEL BOARD at 7 pm 

In-Person: at 1301 Shattuck, Live Oak Community center, Creekside Room 

AGENDA: V. Request for extension of Temporary Appointment in the HHCS Department of Community services specialist III Joshua Oehler and assistant Management Analyst Marilou Orense, VI. Recommendation to Revise Job Class Specification – Deputy Police Chief. 

https://berkeleyca.gov/your-government/boards-commissions/personnel-board 

 

Friday, November 3, 2023 – No City meetings or events found 

Saturday, November 4, 2023 – No City meetings or events found 

Sunday, November 5, 2023 – No City meetings or events found 

 

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AGENDA and RULES COMMITTEE at 2:30 pm 

DRAFT CITY COUNCIL AGENDA for Regular 6 pm Meeting on November 14, 2023 

Hybrid Meeting 

In-Person: at 1231 Addison St. in the School District Board Room 

Videoconference: https://cityofberkeley-info.zoomgov.com/j/1602118494 

Teleconference: 1-669-254-5252 or 1-833-568-8864 (toll free)  

Meeting ID: 160 211 8494 

https://berkeleyca.gov/your-government/city-council/council-committees/policy-committee-agenda-rules 

 

CEREMONIAL MATTERS: 

  1. Presentation: AC Transit Realign Process
 

AGENDA on CONSENT: 

  1. Amend Contract No. 090741-1 add $370,000 total $750,000 thru 12/31/2025 with Foster and Foster Actuaries and Consultants (formerly Bartel Associates, LLC) for Actuarial Consulting Services
  2. Hollander, Economic Development – Expansion of the Elmwood BID (Business Improvement District) for calendar year 2025
  3. Oyekanmi, Finance – Formal bid solicitations $2,453,813
  4. Warhuus, HHCS – Amend Contract No. 31900284 add $290,000 total $6,549,173 with Dorothy Day House to fund inclement Weather Shelter Program
  5. Garland, Public Works – Alameda County Transportation Commission San Pablo Multimodal Corridor Program: Safety Enhancement and Parallel Bike Improvements Projects
  6. Garland, Public Works - Contract $125,000 with Mercury Associates, Inc for Fleet Replacement/Maintenance Study and Consulting Services 12/1/2023 – 12/30/2026
  7. Garland, Public Works – Purchase Order $335,000 wutg Western Truck Parts and Equipment for One Roll Off Truck
  8. Garland, Public Works – Amend multi-year Purchase Order add $400,000 total $11,894,000 with Diesel Direct West, Inc for Fuel for City Vehicles and Equipment for City vehicles and emergency equipment (including generators) increasing the combined amount thru 2/28/2024
Council Consent Items 

  1. Taplin, co-sponsors Hahn, Harrison – Budget referral $7,000Berkeley Junior Jackets Facilities Expenses
AGENDA on ACTION 

  1. Hollander, Economic Development – Renewal Elmwood BID for calendar year 2024
  2. Hollander, Economic Development – Renewal Solano BID for calendar year 2024
  3. Klein, Planning and Development – Amendments to BMC Title 23, the Zoning Map, General Plan Land Use Diagram, and the General Plan relating to the Southside Zoning Implmentation Program of the 2023-2031 Housing element Update to increase residential development in the Southside Plan area
  4. Fair Campaign Practices Commission – Amend BMC Chapter 2.12 Berkeley Election Reform Act (BERA) to ensure cost of living adjustments and committee reporting thresholds
  5. Authors Taplin, Harrison, Bartlett – Budget Referral and Updated Guidelines and Procedures for City Council Office Staff Expenditures, Refer to Budget and Finance Committee to consider updates for AAO#2 of up to $219,080 with regards to staff salaries for up to 2 FTE, meet obligations under SEIU 1021 CSU/PTRLA MOU and prevent layoffs
  6. Wengraf, co-sponsor Arreguin – Resolution authorizing City of Berkeley to enter into MOU with Alameda and Contra Costa Counties to form a Wildfire Prevention Coordinating Group (WPCG) to improve regionwide collaboration to reduce wildfire risk
  7. Warhuus, HHCS - Measure O Bond Impacts on Affordable Housing Development in Berkeley
  8. Klein - LPO NOD: 60 Panoramic Way #LMIN2023-001
  9. Klein - LPO NOD: 803 Delaware, LMSAP2023-0002
  10. Klein - LPO NOD: 1960 San Antonio/645 Arlington LMSAP2022-0005
  11. Klein - LPO NOD: 2113-2115 Kittredge LMSAP2022-0011
  12. Planning Commission Fiscal Year 2023-24 Work Plan
 

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AGENDA for November 7, 2023 CITY COUNCIL Regular Meeting at 6 pm 

A Hybrid Meeting 

In-Person: at 1231 Addison St. in the School District Board Room 

Videoconference: https://cityofberkeley-info.zoomgov.com/j/1609523217 

Teleconference: 1-669-254-5252 or 1-833-568-8864 (toll free)  

Meeting ID: 160 952 3217 

https://berkeleyca.gov/your-government/city-council/city-council-agendas 

 

AGENDA on CONSENT: 

  1. Minutes for Approval
  1. Numainville, City Clerk - Kesarwani Appointment to the Police Accountability Board
  2. Sprague, Fire Dept – Contract $840,000 with O2X Human Performance to provide full-time behavioral and nutritional health services for the Berkeley Fire Department11/1/2023 – 10/31/2025 with option to extend 2 additional years
  3. Sprague, Fire Dept – Purchase Order $504,110 for 3000 gallon Water Tender from Golden State Fire Apparatus, Inc
  4. Warhuus, HHCS – Appoint Dr. Anju Goel, M.D. as Interim Health Officer
  5. Warhuus, HHCS – Reallocate $232,362 in unspent child care subsidy funds awarded through the FY 2020 community agency contract process
  6. Warhuus, HHCS – Northern California Land Trust – 2321 Tenth Street Trust Fund Reservation additional $1,703,585
  7. Kouyoumdjian, HR – Resolution of Intention to Amend the Miscellaneous CalPERS Contract Pursuant to California Government Code Section 20516 to Reduce the Additional Cost Share Contribution Made by Unrepresented Employees on behalf of the City
  8. Mayer, Library – Appointment Tanir Ami to the Board of Library Trustees
  9. Louis, Police – Audit Recommendation status – Data Analysis of Police Response
Council Consent Items 

  1. Arreguin co-sponsors Hahn, Wengraf – United Against Hate Week November 12 – 18, total cost $3000
  2. Arreguin co-sponsors Hahn, Wengraf – Berkeley Holiday Fund, mayor’s discretionary fund $500
  3. Arreguin co-sponsors Hahn, Wengraf, Robinson – Budget Referral $1,000,000 for Housing Retention Program
  4. Taplin, co-sponsors Kesarwani, Hahn – November as Transgender Awareness Month, November 20 as Transgender Awareness Day
  5. Harrison – Budget Referral AAO #1 $6,000 for Two Pilot Special Mentoring and Violence Prevention Events for Berkeley Youth organized by Berkeley Jr. Jackets and Young Lives Matter Foundation
  6. Harrison – Budget referral $800,000 to the November 2023 AAO #1 for Matching funds to Repair Eight Deficient Tide Tubes to Avoid Catastrophic Structural Failure and escalating Construction Costs. (per Ferris now a $3,600,000 - $4,000,000 project, much of stormwater in West Berkeley drains through Aquatic Park Lagoon. If the tide tubes which are clay and concrete and already have cracks fail there will be flooding in west Berkeley)
  7. Hahn, co-sponsors Arreguin, Bartlett, Taplin – resolution supporting local, state and federal efforts to exonerate the Port Chicago 50; 50 Black sailors who were wrongfully convicted of mutiny during WWII in the wake of a massive devasting explosion at the Port Chicago naval base near Concord, CA.
AGENDA on ACTION: 

  1. Numainville, City Clerk – Initiative Petition – Initiative Ordinance Prohibiting Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations in the City of Berkeley
  2. Louis, Police – Pursuant to BMC Chapter 2.99 Technology Report for Automatic License Plate Readers, GPS Trackers, Body Warn Cameras, Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAV’s), the Street Level Imagery Project, and External Fixed Surveillance
  3. Energy Commission – Recommendation on Climate, Building Electrification, and Sustainable Transportation Budget Priorities for FY 2023 – 2024
  4. a. Peace and Justice Commission – Referral of Two Health Educator Positions, b. Radu, City Manager – Refer back to Peace and Justice Commission
INFORMATION REPORTS: 

  1. Louis, Police – Audit Recommendation Status – Berkeley Police: Improvements Needed to Manage Overtime and Security Work for Outside Entities.
 

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NOD – NOTICES of DECISION with deadline to appeal the NOD 

  • 2411 Sixth Street, ZAB 10/30/2023
  • 2712 Telegraph, ZAB 10/31/2023
  • 2924 Russell Street 10/31/2023
LAND USE CALENDAR PUBLIC HEARINGS: 

  • 3000 Shattuck Avenue (Construct 10-story mixed-use building) – TBD
WORK SESSIONS & SPECIAL MEETINGS: 

  • November 2, 2023 - Draft Waterfront Specific Plan (postponed)
  • December 5, 2023 – Re-Imagining Public Safety Update and Ceasefire– (to be the only action item of the evening, Wengraf and Arreguin will be absent on December 5)
UNSCHEDULED WORK SESSIONS & SPECIAL MEETINGS 

  • Fire Department Standards of Coverage & Community Risk Assessment (December 5 at regular council meeting)
  • Dispatch Needs Assessment Presentation
  • Presentation on Homelessness/Re-Housing/Thousand-Person Plan
  • Draft Waterfront Specific Plan (proposed for January 23, 2024)
PAST MEETINGS with reports worth reading: 

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Kelly Hammargren’s summary on what happened the preceding week is posted on the What Happened page at: https://www.sustainableberkeleycoalition.com/what-happened.html and in the Berkeley Daily Planet https://www.berkeleydailyplanet.com/ 

 

The Activist’s Calendar of meetings is posted on the What’s Ahead page at: https://www.sustainableberkeleycoalition.com/whats-ahead.html 

 

If you would like to receive the Activist’s Calendar as soon as it is completed send an email to: kellyhammargren@gmail.com.If you want to receive the Activist’s Diary send an email to kellyhammargren@gmail.com. If you wish to stop receiving the weekly calendar of city meetings please forward the email you received to- kellyhammargren@gmail.com -with the request to be removed from the email list. 

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CLOSED CAPTIONING, SAVE TRANSCRIPT OVERVIEW, DIRECTIONS and ZOOM SUPPORT LINKS:
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ZOOM has as part of the program -(for no extra cost)- Closed Captioning (CC). It turns computer voice recognition into a text transcript. Closed Captioning and show full transcript and the save option are only available when the person setting up the ZOOM meeting has activated these options. If you don’t see CC ask for it. If it can’t be activated for the current meeting ask for it for future meetings. 

 

The accuracy of the Closed Captioning is affected by background noise and other factors, The CC and transcript will not be perfect, but most of the time reading through it the few odd words, can be deciphered--for example "Shattuck" was transcribed as Shadow in one recent transcript. 

 

For the online attendee, the full transcript is only available from the time the attendee activates Show Full Transcript. But if you sit through a meeting and then remember 10 minutes before it is over to click on Show Full Transcript you will only get the last 10 minutes, not the full transcript – So click often on both Save Transcript and on Save to Folder during the meeting for best results. 

 

When you click on Show Full Transcript it will allow you to scroll up and down, so if want to go back and see what was said earlier you can do that during the meeting while the transcript is running. 

 

At the bottom of the transcript when we as attendees are allowed to save there will be a button for, "Save Transcript," you can click on the button repeatedly throughout the meeting and it will just overwrite and update the full transcript. Clicking on the Save Transcript repeatedly as the meeting is coming to an end is important because once the host ends the meeting, the transcript is gone if you didn't save it. 

 

Near the end of the meeting, after you click on "Save Transcript," click on "Save to Folder." The meeting transcript will show up (as a download to your desktop) in a separate box as a text file. (These text files are not large.) After you have done your last Save Transcript and Save to Folder (after the meeting is over) you can rename the new transcript folder on your computer, and save it (re-read or send or share it). 

 

Remember, allowing us attendees to save the meeting transcript does not require the public meeting host to save the transcript (for public record.) 

 

Here is the link to ZOOM Support for how to set up Closed Captioning for a meeting or webinar:
https://support.zoom.us/hc/en-us/articles/8158738379917#h_01GHWATNVPW5FR304S2SVGXN2X 

 

Here is the link to ZOOM Support for attendees in how to save Closed Captions: 

https://support.zoom.us/hc/en-us/articles/360060958752-Using-save-captions#h_01F5XW3BGWJAKJFWCHPPZGBD70 

 

How to convert a YouTube video into a transcript 

 

Copy the YouTube url into the box with “enter a youtube url” and click on go https://youtubetranscript.com/ 

The transcript (not perfect, but very close) will appear instantaneously 


A BERKELEY ACTIVIST'S DIARY. week ending Oct.15

Kelly Hammargren
Tuesday October 24, 2023 - 12:17:00 PM

Once again there is a lot to cover as I pull the last two weeks on the local scene together. To ease the posting and reading here is Part I. Part 2 will follow on what is coming to us in more proposed zoning changes (housing).

The Tuesday 4 pm City Council Special Meeting on Legislative Systems Redesign was enough to make even attentive eyes glaze over. The mayor and Councilmember Hahn made the point at the meeting that Hahn’s proposal started on page 43 of the 138-page packet.

The meeting was nine minutes shy of two hours, started 42 minutes late and no action was taken. Most glaring in all this foolishness comes on page 95 of the 138-page packet, with the header “state or federal model” which appeared to be the basis for the layers of process.

It evidently did not occur to the team engrossed in the systems redesign (several of whom have left employment with the city of Berkeley) that the state legislative system has 40 state senators and 80 assembly members, and covers around 39,000,000 residents or that the federal system has 100 senators, 435 house members and covers 332,000,000 residents.

Berkeley has a mayor and eight councilmembers for the 123,562 of us living on the 10.5 square miles we call Berkeley. Without UC Berkeley students who now number over 40,000, Berkeley’s population would be well under 100,000.

It is not that what the city manager, city employees and city council do is unimportant, since it can be said that council actions can have a big impact on our daily life. Nor is it that committees aren’t useful, as there are occasions when committees are extremely useful in refining legislation. Nor is it that I am steadfastly opposed to committees in total. But I attend City Council Policy Committee meetings and watch the mayor and councilmembers in action. I have come to the conclusion that to create a complicated system for the few of the nine who actually submit major legislation seems a bit over the top.  

I have not spoken with Councilmember Harrison, but I do wonder what all of this process would have done to the natural gas ban that Mayor Arreguin uses to declare himself an environmental leader, when it was Harrison who initiated the natural gas ban and did all the work. I have never seen any other piece of legislation or any other member of council including the mayor to put together so skillfully and powerfully legislation with scientists, industry leaders and dozens of members of the public all in support. 

We can expect the mayor, the councilmembers and the city manager to come out in strong defense of all the layers of review and process in the redesign. But the more I watch the city, the more I think we were better off before the councilmembers began dismantling the commissions and expanding themselves into committees.  

Looking through the documents one last time, the standardized form for submitting legislation is good, but I am not convinced that all this process and committee meetings will be anything more than a detour on getting things done. 

The City Council regular meeting followed the systems redesign. Members of the Chess Club were present, again asking the City to drop the fines to the property owner at the corner of Telegraph and Haste (originally the famous Cody’s books). Speakers pointed out a large number of the players were Black and there were chess players who are unhoused. The obvious implication was that the City action of fines to end the Chess Club smacked of classism and racism. 

Councilmember Robinson with co-sponsor Mark Humbert added an urgent action item to the agenda to open the Dwight Triangle for the Chess Club. This is the tiny spot currently surrounded by fencing at the intersection of Telegraph and Dwight, bounded by steady traffic on all sides.  

The Chess Club responded the Dwight Triangle is a heavy vehicle traffic site, is not a solution and certainly not suitable for children who also play chess with the club.  

What the members of the Chess Club have been saying about why they loved the club appears to define exactly why the City piled on fines to close it. Playing chess on the large private plaza in public view brought an unlikely diverse group of people together whose paths would never cross without this experience. And the presence of such a diverse group in public view conflicted with a vision for upscaling the area. 

Dee Williams-Ridley, City Manager, reported to council 52 homeless encampments were closed, there were 26 deep cleanings and 11 RV encampments were closed.  

As reported in the October 7 Activist’s Diary Part 2, Peter Radu, Assistant to the City Manager, stated at the Homeless Services Panel of Experts (HSPE) meeting in his introduction to the Development of Good Neighbor Guidelines and Encampment Policy, “unsheltered homelessness is our new normal.”  

Sabyl Landrum, an attorney at the East Bay Community Law Center, shared at the follow-up HSPE subcommittee meeting on that policy, that temporary housing amounts to fourteen days. Landrum added that one client recently was able to extend the temporary housing for another fourteen days, but then it will end.  

It is not a very satisfactory picture, if temporary housing means that a homeless person must give up their tent and what little security they might grasp by being in an encampment with others to get a short reprieve of two weeks before being pushed back out on the street again.  

What I am waiting to hear from the City of Berkeley is how long people are housed before they are back on the street. How many homeless people are still housed one month after an encampment is closed, and how many who are offered “permanent” housing are still housed one and two years later, even six months later? How much of what happens in closing encampments results in churning the same people over and over? These are the unanswered questions. 

The last time I recall a report given to City Council and the public with dollar amounts on placement of unhoused persons in permanent housing, council was still meeting in the Maudelle Shirek Building (old city hall). What was so striking in that old report was the average income of the homeless person was around $900/month. The permanent housing started with subsidies which were reduced on a step-down schedule until all subsidies were withdrawn under the assumption, that somehow the former homeless person would be able to come up with the difference.  

There have been reports since those days with numbers of encampments closed and point in time homeless counts, but that doesn’t get to what is the actual success of the programs. The cheapest studio apartment in Berkeley I could find on the internet was $1300/month. The average price for a studio apartment in Berkeley is around $2400. 

For many of us our association with the homeless is to be afraid and repulsed. That is how Cathy A. Small felt when she first saw the homeless man with his dog in the dog park. Then one day there was a dogfight and she needed help. It was the homeless man who came to rescue her. The book The Man in the Dog Park: Coming Up Close to Homelessness by Cathy A. Small with Jason Kordosky and Ross Moore is the story. Small is an anthropologist, Kordosky is a researcher and Ross Moore was the homeless man with whom she wrote the book. 

The book is only 152 pages with a lot packed in on the day to day challenges. Moore’s statement, “the high cost of being poor” in the last chapter is so apropos to the plight of the poor. There is only one copy (print edition) at the Berkeley library and no editions at any of the other five area libraries I use. It is worth buying, reading and passing on to a friend.  

The next Homeless Services Panel of Experts Subcommittee on the Development of Good Neighbor Guidelines and Encampment Policy is scheduled for Monday, October 30 at 7 pm at the Media Center. It will be offered as a hybrid meeting. Since the last subcommittee meeting was word of mouth and not posted on the City website, I will try to pick it up in the Activist’s Calendar. 

Not much else happened at the council meeting. The only action item was the status report on the city’s financial condition which centered on setting aside a portion of city funds as an emergency reserve. This was in follow-up to the City Auditor’s recommendations. 

The Rhinos Kayak Polo team who won the September 2023 USA Nationals Youth Division opened the Parks, Recreation and Waterfront Commission meeting on Wednesday. They took up the non-agenda comment with their request for a place to store their equipment at the waterfront so their equipment didn’t have to be hauled back and forth for each practice. It would mean less dependence on parents with vehicles to haul the equipment. More kids could participate.  

Searching through old Parks, Recreation and Waterfront Commission Agendas, there was a communication from the Bay Area Kayak Polo Club requesting a berth fee waiver in April 2023; however, this does not appear to be the same group. There was no action on the communication.  

Commissions can’t act on non-agenda items other than to thank the public and put an item on a future agenda. In this case the commission doesn’t have control over storage areas. That would go to Scott Ferris, Director of Parks, Recreation and Waterfront. He was present and hopefully listened.  

The Ohlone Greenway Improvement Project appeared on the Parks, Recreation and Waterfront Commission agenda for the very first time on October 11, 2023. Ferris, who initiated the agenda item, informed the commission that the plan was to widen the bicycle/pedestrian path to fourteen feet and remove five mature trees. There were no diagrams of the project or photos of the trees to be removed. The Parks Commission after discussion with Ferris settled on opposing the removal of mature trees.  

According to the webpage on the City website the Ohlone Greenway Improvement Project has been in process since August 2022 and is listed on the City website as a transportation project. The public comment period ended August 25, 2023. The project never appeared on the Transportation and Infrastructure Commission agenda. The project never appeared on the Parks, Recreation and Waterfront Commission agenda until October,when apparently everything has been finalized. I never saw an announcement of in-person meetings in February. It is a mystery who attended.  

Bicyclists are not the only users of the Ohlone Greenway. There were walkers and runners out there today in the rain as my walk partner and I tried to figure out from my soggy printout which trees were targeted to be cut done. Here is the link for your own investigation. https://berkeleyca.gov/your-government/our-work/capital-projects/ohlone-greenway-safety-improvements-project  

Commissioner Wozniak brought up for discussion a possible ballot measure for a parks tax increase. There were questions about the financing of the parks and what happens to the TOT (Transient Occupancy Tax – the add-on on your hotel/motel bill) and service taxes. Why do they go into the general fund with only a portion being reallocated to supporting the Marina? One advantage of not being a commissioner is not having to tiptoe around the truth. I could say Wozniak put forth a valiant argument for financing the Marina at the Budget Committee and the City Manager nixed it (Wozniak confirmed my comment). Nothing was voted on or finalized. This is something to watch for now.  

The Commission did finalize their Waterfront Specific Plan. The Commission is supposed to have a seat at the table at the November 2 City Council meeting on the Waterfront Specific Plan. It is rumored that the City staff/consultant version for the waterfront is undergoing yet another revision. Keep your eyes peeled. Thursday, November 2 is the planned meeting date.  

The very public Waterfront Specific Plan open house on September 23, 2023, where we could walk around the Nature Center at Shorebird Park and put our sticky notes with comments on the poster boards, hasn’t made it onto the City’s Waterfront Specific Plan website. I always feel uncomfortable with sticky notes wondering how many of those unwanted comments will fall off the boards. At least the cookies were good. https://berkeleyca.gov/your-government/our-work/capital-projects/waterfront-specific-plan  

I took a rare day off from city meetings on Thursday October 12. I didn’t make it to the Budget and Finance Committee, but I did listen to the recording. Councilmember Harrison was unable to attend and was replaced by Hahn. Only one agenda item was discussed, the AAO (Annual Appropriations Ordinance) which is a fancy way of saying the mid-year budget adjustment. There are two yearly budget adjustments, one in the fall and one in the spring.  

This is when the Budget Committee finds out what didn’t get done, what budgeted money wasn’t spent, whether revenue was over or under projections and how much is available for councilmember budget requests.  

Since this was Hahn’s first time on the Budget Committee, she asked lots of questions including where the councilmember budget requests were. Not including the council budget requests in the first round is the usual dance. All the requests and priorities from the City Manager are posted in the first round. Council requests don’t appear until later. No action was taken and it will be up again on October 26th.  

Only one of the fixed cameras approved by council has been installed.  

The three meetings on housing that bookended the week were far more interesting and coming in Part 2.  


Opinion

Public Comment

ON MENTAL WELLNESS: how vulnerable people with psychiatric issues can deal with war

Jack Bragen
Monday October 30, 2023 - 10:59:00 AM

I am a writer with hundreds of credits over a twenty-year span, but I am also schizoaffective, a diagnosis which is downgraded in the past decade, originally schizophrenia, paranoid-type. With this condition, I am more vulnerable to some of the hard things in life. Mentally ill people like me probably have a very hard time wrapping our minds around mindless destruction, murder, and idiocy. And to be specific, I am speaking of the armed conflict going on in the Middle East. 

In this piece, I'm not going to even try to tell you which side is justified. Neither side is justified. The point is--this is war. When there is war, everybody loses. This is about how we can deal with the situation as vulnerable, disabled civilians. 

I am Jewish by ancestry. I have my biases and I have my sentiments. What is my main sentiment? I can tell you this: war stinks. 

When an armed conflict happens on our Earth, every life form on Earth is affected. And the shock waves could even travel beyond our own Earth by means of the electromagnetic signatures of weapons detonating, and through radio, television, and internet telecommunications. This war as with all wars we create, could shape our interstellar reputation, when other, extraterrestrial life forms pick up the electromagnetic signals. But for now, we don't have to be concerned about that. Future generations may need to deal with this, if and when we meet up with ETs, if we survive long enough to do so. 

On Earth, Jews face increasing hate and antisemitism. This is making itself known almost anywhere I look. This is one of the effects of this war, and I will not elaborate further. 

Mentally ill people must practice more self-care so that we do not get acutely ill with our disorders reactively flaring up. We might have barely been stable before this happened, and now we are looking at trying to live in a far more stressful and more hostile environment. 

Israel is one of the closest allies of the United States, so when that country is in jeopardy, all Americans are affected. 

I, personally, face multiple challenges. I may have to move to another housing situation depending on factors I don't control. In the past six months, I have physically separated from my wife of twenty-seven years, with little or no chances of going back. I have economic challenges. And the environment I live in has multiple stressors. 

I feel pain over the split-up with my spouse. I feel pain over innocent people being killed in the Ukraine conflict and in the Middle East. As a mentally ill man, I am not adapted to a wartime society. I'm trying to focus on simple tasks so that the ball keeps rolling in my own life. 

I've made it a priority to get plenty of rest time. I might listen to the radio, whether it is news or music. I might drink iced coffee. I might indulge in small amounts of snacks or sodas. I need to be kind to myself. If that means skipping shaving for a couple days, if that means taking an afternoon nap, so be it. Listening to the radio for music and news helps me calm down. Don't underestimate the value of good music. 

I'm just trying to keep my head above water, and this is challenging. As a writer, it is tempting to address international events, and I sometimes do that. But I am also treating myself to writing some fiction pieces. And doing that is joyful. The characters seem to jump out of the page. And maybe that's the way writing is supposed to be. 

I maintain compliance with psychiatric medication, and I keep in touch with treatment practitioners. And this is a must. I truly appreciate help from family. They know I'm in a tough situation because of my split with my wife and with my moving. And they seem to have my back, as do the professional mental health staff who are helping me. Don't shy away from accepting help and asking for help. 

Things aren't smooth and they aren't easy. But with some help, some tenacity, some medication, and some restfulness, maybe I and the readers can get through this, and be better, when the war is over and when any hard life situations can be resolved. 


Jack Bragen is a mental health, commentary, and fiction writer and lives in Martinez, California.


SMITHEREENS: Reflections on Bits & Pieces:Boos&Dues&TheBlues

Gar Smith
Monday October 30, 2023 - 03:04:00 PM

Spooky Speaking

On my Sunday morning run, I got a great pre-Halloween scan at porches populated with pumpkins and fences covered with fake webs and lobster-sized spiders. But one display on Eunice Street stood out. It consisted of three large figures leaning over a front-yard fence and each holding a sign. Together, their message read: "We really thought/Climate Change/Was a Hoax!" All three figures were life-sized skeletons.

Washington's Debt Spiral

Joe Biden has his hand out for another$100 billion to pay for military assistance to fuel the wars in Ukraine and Gaza (while prepping for a show-down, end-all collision with China and setting aside barrels of cash to secure US interests in Latin America and along the US-Mexico border.) Although the Pentagon famously has not won a war since 1945 (and Russia played a major role in that "win"), belligerent "We're top-dog" US foreign policy continues to call for more weapons, more war, more militarism. 

But there's a serious fiscal housekeeping dilemma. The US Treasury Department reports the FY2023 US federal deficit has now topped$1.7 trillion.Meanwhile, the Peter G. Peterson Foundation places the total accumulated national debt at$33 trillion.  

So what are we doing to lower the debt? Little to nothing. And getting the US out of debt may prove to be a greater challenge than solving the mounting threat of climate change. Considering this, some economists note that if we could start reducing our debt load by paying it down at the rate of $1 per second, it would take 31.7 years just to cut the debt by $1billion. Paying off the first $1 trillion of debt at the dollar-per-minute rate would take 709.8 years. The good news: At this rate we could payoff our $33 trillion debt in just 23,423 years! 

National Debt Emergency: Interest On Debt
To Surpass Defense, Medicare, Medicaid Spending 

 

Fashion Plates 

Personalized license plates spotted about town: 

MAPENZI (Swahili for "Love") 

(Heart)WYNZ: (Love Wins) 

I(Heart)MYAMU: (I love My Atomic Mass Unit?) 

LEARNIN (A student on wheels) 

EHH OK (Eh? Okay!) 

EZZY (Easy) 

JAZZZAZ: (Jazz Ass?) 

GRNWMBT: (Green Wombat?) 

BumperSnickers 

"Dog Is My Co-pilot" 

"Honk If You Like Zygomorphic Flowers" 

"Tell Your Cat: 'Pspspsps!'" 

Dan Ellsberg's Memorial 

With the recent death of Pentagon Papers whistleblower Dan Ellsberg, we lost a great American and a good neighbor. A short time ago, the Ellsberg family organized a warm and endearing three-hour memorial to Dan that shared the memories of family, friends, colleagues, researchers, activists, artists and policymakers. To show the long reach of Ellsberg's extensive activism, the eclectic roster of co-conspirators included reminiscences by Barbara Streisand and Jane Fonda. The Ellsberg family has recently made a video of the memorial tribute available on YouTube. Here's the link. 

 

Guns for Wife-beaters? 

Forbes magazine notes that The Supreme Court is due to hear oral arguments November 7 in United States v. Rahimi, to consider the constitutionality of a federal statute that bans people with records of spousal abuse from owning firearms. 

The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals found in favor of Zackey Rahimi, who went on a shooting spree while under a restraining order for domestic abuse. 

In 2022, the Supreme Court’ ruled (in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen) that firearm laws must be “consistent with this Nation’s historical tradition of firearm regulation.” And that meant following weapons policies that were in effect at the time the country's founding. The Bruen decision ruled that since the colonies had no laws forbidding wife-beaters from owning weapons, there was no constitutional basis for depriving wife-beaters of their "constitutional right" to possesses deadly weapons under the 2nd Amendment. 

Salient point not addressed by the Fifth Circuit Court: There was no such thing as assault rifles "at the time the US was founded." 

Reinventing the Fifth Wheel 

The spare tire on the backside of vintage autos has an interesting history. Turns out that, long before Detroit started producing modern cars that could "self-park," earlier generations of car designers came up with their own solution. These videos show two of these all-but-forgotten "fifth-wheel spinners." 

 

 

Taking Stock of Taxing Stocks 

Robert Reich writes how multi-millionaires Charles and Kathleen Moore "argued in a lower court that $15,000 they owed in taxes on their foreign stock income was unconstitutional." When a federal court ruled against them—they appealed to the Supreme Court, which has agreed to hear the case. 

"If SCOTUS finds for the plaintiffs," Reich warns, "the court could use this case to head off any new wealth tax Congress might pass on billionaires, including … legislative proposals like Elizabeth Warren’s wealth tax."  

Also at risk: a proposed law designed to “Oppose Limitless Inequality Growth and Reverse Community Harms.” In case you missed it, the short-hand for this legislation is the OLIGARCH Act—an acronym for the record books! 

"I've Got Your Back" 

Joe Biden, the War Whisperer, has shown that he sees no reason why an act of heinous terrorism shouldn't be met with an act of historic, barbaric, heartless genocide.  

Biden (doing his tough-guy Dirty Harry impersonation) has repeatedly rasped a promise that America "has Israel's back." 

It turns out there's more truth to that turn-of-phrase that Joe realizes. The phrase "I've got your back" refers to an aggressive military tactic employed when raiding urban buildings and homes. 

According to DigitalCultures, the exact origin of the expression is not known, although it has several war and military implications: 

"One possible root for the phrase can be traced back to the era of sword fighting, when warriors would fight back to back in order to protect each other’s’ behinds…. 

"The more recent and more likely origin of 'I’ve got your back' can be found in World War 2, when soldiers entering buildings and rooms were exposed from the back, requiring their brothers in arms to watch their backs." 

The phrase isn't describing trench warfare or traditional armed field maneuvers: it's talking about urban warfare in which civilians are presumed to be valid targets for invasive armed attacks. 

When Biden swears to have Bibi's back, he's signing on to an unprecedented program of ethnic cleansing that involves millions of fleeing, unfed, homeless, frightened and wounded civilians—half of whom are children. If Netayahu is ever held to account for one of history's darkest acts of genocide, Biden deserves an adjacent seat in the dock of the World Court, prepared to face the consequences of having backed a war criminal and helping to commit Crimes against Humanity.  

Who's Opposed to Saving Civilian Lives in Gaza? 

Jordan has introduced a UN Resolution calling for an end to Israel's catastrophic air and ground assault on Gaza City. The resolution was supported by 120 countries, including Russia, China, and Brazil. India abstained, as did the delegates from Australia, Canada, Germany, Italy, and Ukraine. A minority of 14 countries opposed the humanitarian proposal. The outliers included the USA, Israel, Austria, the Czech Republic, Croatia, and Hungary." 


ON MENTAL WELLNESS: Pipe Dreams and Denial Systems

Jack Bragen;
Tuesday October 24, 2023 - 01:50:00 PM

Being in denial could mean not acknowledging something difficult, and/or, it could mean unrealistic thoughts of getting something, (any impracticable thing you're after). This is not unique to people with psychiatric issues. I know several non-neurodivergent people who are in unhealthy denial about their life situations. And if they could face a few bleak facts, they might be able to take necessary steps to get their situations resolved.  

Believing you will have the winning ticket makes the California Lottery a big moneymaker for the state. (While it can be fun to play lotto if you have the extra money, there is no realism to it. So long as you don't spend your food or housing money on it, you're fine.) But when wishful thinking takes over, it can lead to spiraling downward. I once knew a man who wanted to get a real estate license. Yet he didn't come across as someone with whom you would trust the massive cost of a house or other property. And I presume that for the real estate business as with many other pursuits, how you come across to people is vital. Impressions matter. Because of that, and for other reasons, his idea wasn't realistic.  

There can be a fine line between having a pipe dream versus being able to do something the naysayers are naysaying. Part of the question is of whether you can do the work involved. I don't want to rain on people's parades. However, if we want to be successful at something, it might be a good idea to temper dreams with a bit of skepticism, applied to ourselves. You must realistically assess what is needed to accomplish something.  

When I was a sixteen-year-old youth, I believed I could get a bottom rung job in Silicon Valley and work my way to the top and become a millionaire by thirty. The reality: no one would hire me.  

When I did get a job, it was the worst possible job you could imagine, and it was something that an uneducated person could get and do. The big ambitions were replaced with making six hundred dollars a month and enjoying the earnings. It was the beginning of the end.  

That was the early nineteen eighties. And since then, it has been an unintentional exploration to discover the basic truth about life, and meanwhile, making a ton of mistakes and paying for it with a lot of pain. But I'm not an eighteen-year-old anymore. And I'm trying to figure out what happened to my life.  

I'm not in denial anymore. Yet I have discovered that the life of a mentally ill person often sucks eggs. And that's a simple truth that you don't need to dissect. It provides a lot of subject matter for my essays.  

Even practicing meditation is sometimes contorted into escapism and denial. There is a woman who practices Zen, and she is in the middle of being abused by her offspring. When I tried to tell her that meditation would not work to deflect the abuse, her face took on a lecturing appearance, and she adopted a superior air.  

This is not to dispute the proven value of mindfulness. Yet meditation like anything else, can become like a drug addiction. Other people busy themselves in work, and they might dread how they will be treated when they get home.  

Delusions can start out as a denial system, yet the brain takes the ball and runs with it, and the state of denial launches delusional material as well as a disorganized state. The condition takes on a life of its own, and that, in a best-case scenario, ultimately leads to diagnosis and treatment.  

I'm not saying that psychosis is denial. It is a symptom of a biologically unwell brain. Yet denial can make things worse. In my past, acceptance of an unhappy truth was one of the things that allowed me to get better.  

When I taught myself to let go of "attachments" (the term is derived from Buddhism) delusions continued, and they continue to exist in my thinking, but they have a smaller amount of power over me--but still a lot.  

When a person is not afraid to face hard truths, it is a bit easier to navigate among the choppy waters of the inside of a psychotic mind. When you are not clinging to very much, you don't have much emotional attachment to the delusional beliefs. And that makes it more possible for people to talk to you.  

Delusions are interwoven with strong emotions. When you can resolve the emotional element, it takes a lot of the power away from the psychotic syndrome.  

But some parts of life are good. It matters that we do not give in to cynicism and pessimism. To the reader: Don't give up hope. The little bits of joy can be found here and there, and they could be anything. Just having a cup of tea with a friend, or alone if need be, is worth it. This week I advise doing something you like. 

There was a Zen poet who wrote about seeing beauty when looking down at the contents of an outhouse. If you can see beauty within the supposed ugliness, it is a definite form of power--internal power, but genuine power. ------------------------------------------------------------------ 

Jack Bragen writes and lives in Martinez.


ECLECTIC RANT: War in the Holy land — No End in Sight

Ralph E. Stone
Monday October 23, 2023 - 12:56:00 PM

We should all be concerned about the humanitarian consequences of Israels constant bombing and siege of Gaza, and its military evacuation order for over a million people in northern Gaza and Gaza City and then the bombing of these fleeing evacuees. If Israeli does invade Gaza, expect many more casualties.

In Gaza, more than 4,000 people have already been killed and another 13,000 injured, and countless have lost their homes. At least 1,400 people have died and 3,400 others have been injured in Israel, mostly on the Oct. 7 initial attack.

While this bloodshed in Gaza is occurring, President Biden, Secretary of State Blinken, Secretary of Defense Austin and other White House officials keep repeating the same old mantra — "The United States has Israels back.” Their words are supported by two U.S. aircraft carriers with supporting ships standing by off Israels coast. 

Their seemingly unqualified support for the bloodshed and dispossession Gaza civilians must end. Clearly, the Hamas attack on Israel is and was reprehensible but no righteous cause justifies the continued bloodshed and dispossession of innocent civilians on either side. Israel has a right to defend itself but Israels response has now gone way beyond defense; it is now vengeance, and the U.S. is complicit by simply standing by. 

Hamas never recognized Israels right to exist and committed itself to uncompromising armed struggle. Hamass political aim seems be to destroy any chance for peace and normalization while Israel is determined to eliminate Hamas altogether. These goals haven't changed. Thus, a cease fire between Hamas and Israel seems unlikely, at least in the near future. The war is already escalating. antitank missiles were fired from Lebanon into three areas in Israel; Israeli forces responded with tank and artillery fire and struck a Hezbollah observation post. And the Pentagon reported several drone attacks on U.S. military positions in Iraq and Syria. The longer the conflict continues, the more likely the conflict will widen even further.


SMITHEREENS: Reflections on Bits & Pieces:Stings,Rings&Dings

Gar Smith
Monday October 23, 2023 - 12:29:00 PM

Stung

A friend who spends time on a boat docked at the Berkeley Marina recently emailed a photo of her badly swollen arm, the result of an insect bite. "I look like Popeye," she lamented.

She had been bitten by a yellow-jacket and theorized the attack was triggered by groundskeepers at the Marina who had been hacking away at the same flowering plants that attract bees and other insects. The looming question seemed to be: were the local wasps driven by hunger or sheer vengeance?

For an answer to that question, I turned to the experts at www.alamedabees.com. ACBA's Ronni Brega responded as follows:

"At this time of year yellow-jackets are foraging for protein, specifically meat of any kind to feed new brood. They are not foraging on plants for nectar or pollen much right now. Wasps and yellow-jackets are omnivores, bees and butterflies are vegetarian. YJ's nest in the ground, typically around plants, it could be that the gardeners (or you) disturbed a nest. They have no barbs on their stingers, so they can sting multiple times, and will. Honeybees do have a barb, and die after stinging." 

Alert Alerts! Part 1 

This has been the month for Emergency Alerts. The first week of October featured a Presidential test-firing of the National Wireless Emergency Alert System. What made this especially troubling was the discovery that Russia had conducted its first-ever "nationwide nuclear attack exercise" on October 3, the day before the US alert. This news made headlines all over the globe—except in the US. The Russian exercise was conducted over concerns about a US "first-strike" that could destroy 70% of Russian homes and lead to Moscow's declaration of martial law. 

The "good news" (if you are Russian): The former Soviet Union has built more that 16,000 nuclear fallout shelters—each capable of saving many hundreds of lives. The "bad news" (should you happen to be a Yankee): The US only has one nuclear bunker for its 332 million citizens (unless you happen to be in the military or in government). This special bunker is located "in the Seattle area" and it was built to shelter "about 200 people." Given those stats, you might think the US would be the last country to contemplate a "nuclear exchange." But that would assume that the folk in Washington and the Pentagon care more about their fellow citizens than being able to claim "full-spectrum dominance." 

If you happened to be among the millions of Americans startled by the racket on your phones, TVs and radios, you may have wondered how this exercise served to "maintain and improve alert and warning capabilities at the federal, state, local, tribal and territorial levels and to evaluate the nation's public alert and warning capabilities." Especially since the national alert ended with the comforting announcement: "No action is required by the public." 

What was missing was any federal guidance or information regarding a public response to an emergency. The exercise only established one fact: The federal government now has the power to simultaneously seize control of everyone's Smartphone, radio, and TV screen. 

Alert Alerts! Part 2 

October's Second Sonic Shocker came on the 18th when Bay Area communication devices all chimed in to announce the imminent impact of a real-life earthquake. The performance was less than stellar, info-wise. The USGS ShakeAlert lit up millions of screens with announcements in three key categories—Severity, Urgency, and Certainty. These were followed by three incident-specific warnings—Severe, Immediate, and Observed. While the last item (Certainty Observed) was somewhat obscure, what followed was even more of a challenge for mono-lingual Americans. At the 9:37-minute mark, the Emergency Alert service was advising those at risk that "Terremoto detectado!" and they should immediately "Agachese, cubrase, sujetese." By 9:41 AM, that critical info had been reposted as "Earthquake Detected! Drop, Cover, Hold On. Protect Yourself." 

Not the best debut for a seismic alert. Meanwhile, Apple's MyShake app predicted a 5.7-magnitude floor-rattler near Sacramento, only to have the warning downgraded to a 4.2 quake near Isleton. But overall, a surreal-world introduction to the challenge of predicting The Big One. 

The "Un-Gun": A Boon or a Boondoggle? 

The gun-totters at the NRA may have a new cause for concern—the "Un-Gun," a new non-lethal pistol that is redefining the big-bucks business of "self-defense." The Byrna SD (Self Defense) pistol doesn't use gunpowder to fire bullets. Instead, the Byrna-blaster employs cartridges of compressed CO2 to launch "68-caliber round kinetic and/or chemical irritant projectiles that can disable a threat from up to 60-feet away." While the un-gun's "un-bullets" travel at an average speed of 300-feet-per-second they don't pose a deadly threat to innocent bystanders or hapless victims in nearby homes. The un-gun could be a change-maker since it answers the law's "self-defense" role without involving "deadly force." It is doubtful that the up-armed advocates of the Second Amendment would be happy with a gun that only provides self-protection but lacks the allure of a bloody execution. (Really, wouldn't the world be a better place without any weapons—including "un-guns.") 

And what would the Supreme Court say? Well, we may never know because, unlike firearms that are designed to kill, current laws do not apply to this new non-lethal weapon. As the following video notes, buying a Byrna is a simple matter because acquiring un-guns is "completely legal"—no background checks required. 

 

Fashion Plates 

Personalized license plates spotted around town: 

PAPAFINK 

TEEOFF (Golf Lover) 

THE WOOF (Dog Lover) 

L(heart) IS (Love Is) 

CRLYLOX (Curley Locks) 

AIR H2O (Air and Water) 

GRNBEAM (Green Beam?) 

KGHIDRA (Cagey Hydra?) 

CROQODL (Crocodile) 

OBEFREE (Oh Be Free) 

SMALLR (on a Mini Cooper) 

TAX MUSK (not on a Tesla) 

MSTFMBL (Misty Fumble?) 

Bumper Snickers 

"I Brake for Unusual Cloud Patterns" 

"Jesus Loves You. But I'm His Favorite" 

"I've got KIDS. Get Too Close And I'll Ding Your Sh-t" 

"Life's like a movie. Write your own ending. Keep believing Keep pretending" 

"I'd Rather Be in the 100 Acre Wood" 

Feinstein Was Relentless 

Count me among the millions of Americans who were shocked to learn of Senator Dianne Feinstein's death. Feinstein had worked right up until the end, posing with a friend in her DC apartment after a typical long day's work. The smiles on their faces gave no hint that Sen. Feinstein would not live to see another workday. 

So I was startled the next morning when I opened my email and found a letter from Sen. Feinstein thanking me for writing "regarding environmental justice programs." 

"Throughout my time in the Senate," Feinstein wrote, "I have fought to defend bedrock environmental laws and protect American communities from dangerous pollutants…. Please know I appreciate hearing your support for environmental justice." 

The letter, written on her last day in office, ended with a "Best regards," a "Sincerely yours," and Feinstein's signature. 

Biden Produces an All-Time Great Presidential Statement 

An email from David Swanson, Executive Director of World BEYOND War, offers this selection of memorable presidential quotes: 

"I Am Not A Crook" (Nixon) 

"Mistakes Were Made" (Ronald Reagan) 

"Mission Accomplished" (George W. Bush) 

"We Tortured Some Folks" (Barack Obama) 

"It appears as though it was done by the other team." (Joe Biden referring to the bombing of a hospital in Gaza.) 

"Biden has joined the greats," Swanson wrote. "We are awed. And shocked." 

A (Pre-Gaza) Note to Joe Biden 

(Sept 20, 2023) Thank you, Mr. President, for announcing the formation of the American Climate Corps. Extreme weather events have devastated our homes, disrupted our lives, and caused billions of dollars in damage to our cities, coastlines, and forests. 

Climate Change and the Sixth Extinction are the real existential battles we must confront. 

Please abandon Washington's attempts to maintain a global empire. Stop wasting billions on military arms, hundreds of foreign bases, and long-running occupations that end in defeat and withdrawal. 

End the war in Ukraine before more lives are lost. Russia was wrong to cross Ukraine's border but the US routinely invades other countries that are nowhere near our borders — Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya. Consider Syria where the US has invaded another country, seized its oil, and (at last count) has built no less than 14 US military bases inside Syria. 

War Pollutes 

According to a report on the environmental impacts of the Ukraine war, the German newspaper Deutsche Welle noted: "Emissions generated over the first twelve months of the war totaled 120 million tons of carbon-dioxide…. This is slightly less than the annual emissions of Belgium, whose per capita emissions in 2019 were the seventh highest in the European Union." 

Meanwhile, Pravda, the Russian daily, notes that supplying weapons for the Ukraine war has drained the Pentagon's stockpiles of TNT. 

Pravda writes: "the replenishment of the American arsenal will require a search for basic materials for the production of weapons, and this problem is complicated by a global shortage of chemicals and explosives. The United States no longer produces TNT and has switched to a substitute called IMX, but a sharp increase in shell production has prompted the United States to look for new global suppliers of TNT." 

The "Lungs of the Planet" Facing Its Last Gasp? 

How bad has the long-running deforestation of the Amazon rainforest been? According to The Guardian, in the 35 years since 1988, this once-vast rainforest has suffered the loss of 10,000 acres—PER DAY! The total loss encompasses an area larger than the entire state of California. 

Hey Tesla! Make Room for the Hydro-Honda! 

What has been hailed as the first commercial prototype of a hydrogen-powered car may soon come to market. It's a Honda that fully charges in 5 minutes and boasts a 559-mile range. The engine is designed to pull climate-cooking carbon out of the air. The amount of air processed by the vehicle's engine is said to be equal to 33 people breathing for a whole day. The only emission? Water. 

These H-powered cars will initially be available in California, where fleets of hydrogen-fuel-cell buses have been reliably serving transit needs for many years. While California's H-powered busses are costly to buy, they've proven to be inexpensive to operate. 

A close look at a photograph of a Hydro-Honda zipping down a road shows its tailpipes emitting (sure enough) nothing but water! Questions arise. Is the liquid pouring from the tail-pipes potable? Can it be stored onboard and recycled to water vegetable gardens? 

And what happens to the carbon pollution that's pulled out of the air? Does in accumulate in filters inside the car? How often does it need to be removed and how can the captured carbon be sequestered? 

Paul Simon's Sermon for Trump 

An anthem by Ken Johnson 

“Hello MAGAs, my old friends,
l've come to beg for cash again.
Because indictments softly creeping,
Left subpoenas while I was sleeping.
And conspiracies, that were planted in my brain,
Still remain
Within the sound of silence.
 

In endless courts I walked alone.
Speaking in a whiny tone.
'Neath the halo of a judge's lamp
 

My orange makeup was thick, cold and damp. 

When my eyes were stabbed by the flash of a mugshot light,
That made for quite the sight
And touched the sound of silence.
 

And in the naked light I saw,
Ten supporters, not one more.
People talking without speaking.
People hearing without listening.
People saying lies with evidence never shared,
No one dared
Disturb the sound of silence.
 

Fools on Fox, you do not know,
Silence like a cancer grows.
Hear Jack's words that he might teach you,
Read the charges that Smith might reach you.
But his words. like silent raindrops fell
and echoed in the wells of silence.
 

And the people bowed and prayed,
To the pompous god they made
And J6 flashed out its warning
To the insurrection that DJT was forming
And the sign said, "The words of the prophets
Are written on the Capitol walls
And Courthouse halls
And whispered in the sounds of silence."
 

I swear I could hear Simon and Garfunkle singing along as I read this parody. 

Meanwhile, Trump's merch now includes renditions of his glowering booking photo—an arresting image, to be sure. The scowling scoundrel's face now adorns posters, T-shirts, and coffee cups. Bingo! Trump has become the first felon to have his mug-shot on an actual mug. 

 

 

Wrapping Up with a Few Furry Hugs

It's good to be back in the Planet's orbit. Let's end on a high note. 

 

 

 

 

Animals Reunited With Owners After Years!

 

 


Reflections

Councilmember Kate Harrison, Berkeley District 4
Wednesday October 25, 2023 - 12:23:00 PM

I am still experiencing profound grief in the face of the brutal terror attack by Hamas and the immense and ongoing loss of life and trauma of bombings in Gaza. Last weekend, I attended a wedding back east of a dear friend from International House with a guest list that included Muslims and Jews from around the world. As a unified international community, we must condemn both the terror attack and hostage taking by Hamas against Israelis and the unrelenting bombardment, siege, and blockade against civilians in Gaza. Tragically, thousands of humans are dead and traumatized, and there is now unconscionable talk about a broader regional, or even global war. 

I am also deeply concerned by and condemn the Antisemitic and Islamophobic incidents occurring in the United States as a result of this conflict, including the murder of a Palestinian-American boy in Chicago and threats This is the effect of terror. This is the effect of eye-for-eye thinking which, as Mahatma Gandhi reminds us, leaves everyone blind. I am calling for all of the bombings to stop, now. I am profoundly grateful that our Congresswoman Barbara Lee has put forward a statement with other members of the House calling for an immediate ceasefire. 

In these times of crisis, I have faith that the Berkeley community can come together to call for peace, an end to bloodshed, the release of hostages, and justice for all. The Superintendent of Berkeley Schools offered the following resources to help in your communication with children regarding the current state of events: 

 

* How to Talk to Kids About Violence, Crime, and War (Common Sense Media). 

* Resilience in a time of war: Tips for parents and teachers of elementary school children: (American Psychological Association). 

* Talking to Children About War (National Child Traumatic Stress Network). 

 

Please reach out to my office if you have concerns about the impacts of this conflict on our community or need assistance in any way. We are here to help each other. 

 

Click here for a "clickable" version of this article.


Open Letter to Councilmember Kate Harrison

Eric Friedman
Tuesday October 24, 2023 - 10:09:00 AM

I read your October 19th email about the Hamas attack on October 7th with a heavy heart. Being one of your Jewish constituents I would have liked to have read a note of consolation, not twelve days after the Hamas attack on Israel and not a high-handed statement that tries to equate a calculated and savage attack with the suffering of the Palestinians in Gaza. Your colleagues, particularly Susan and Mark, responded much more quickly and with an authenticity that I find lacking in your email. 

Your district contains most of the Berkeley Eruv — did you know that? It’s a central district for Jewish residents of Berkeley, many of whom have family and friends in Israel. Had you swiftly and simply acknowledged the pain your constituents are feeling, that would have been helpful. 

The NYTimes Daily Podcast just broadcast an interview with a mother whose son had his arm blown off and who was then taken hostage. They immigrated to Israel from Berkeley.  

The son is my daughter’s age and he was dancing at a music festival. He and friends hid in a bomb shelter. A Muslim Bedouin man tried to tell the terrorists that there were only Muslims there. The Hamas fighters killed him and then started shooting and throwing hand grenades into the shelter. One man threw many of the grenades back, but not enough. That’s how the boy from Berkeley lost his arm before being dragged off… to die? To be held for 5 years like Gilad Shalit?  

Hamas is now using their captives’ phones to access their social media accounts and torment family members. 

This is categorically different from a military campaign aimed at military targets. Of course it’s terrible that Hamas plants those targets in civilian areas and the harm done to innocents is awful. But they are not the same and yet your note suggests that they are of a piece, combining them into the same sentences.  

If/when Israeli soldiers go into Gaza, they aren’t going to rape anyone. They aren’t going to behead babies. If any soldier did do that, they’d be court martialed like the soldiers of our own military would be.  

In sum, I think your message arrived too late and rested on an equivalency that simply isn’t there. At a time when your Jewish constituents needed to hear words of comfort, your note had quite the opposite effect.


Open Letter to President Biden

Jagjit Singh
Thursday October 19, 2023 - 10:14:00 AM

An investigation by The Los Angeles Times exposed the massive lies - Palestinians raping women and Palestinians killing themselves in their hospital, intended to inflame passions to deflect the massive bombings in Gaza, war crimes perpetrated against a civilian population. As the saying goes, "A lie can travel halfway around the world while the truth is putting on its shoes." 

Israel committed a terrible airstrike on the Baptist Hospital, run by the Anglican Church, killing no fewer than 500 Palestinians, mainly children and women, and injuring more than 300 others. Why? For what? It was all about the Israeli ultimatum that had already, according to WHO, bombed no fewer than 27 hospitals, including Shifa Hospital, to evict and evacuate, allowing Israel to conduct its ethnic cleansing of significant parts of Gaza at the moment, with a plan to ethnically cleanse all of the Gaza Strip. 

The United States should support an immediate ceasefire. The meeting that should have taken place with the Jordanian king, the Egyptian president, and the Palestinian president did not occur because all three realized that Mr. Biden does not want to support an immediate ceasefire. They concluded that he supports the ethnic cleansing of Palestinians from Gaza into Egypt, something Egypt, Jordan, and all Arab countries have refused. 

It is shameful that President Biden echoed the talking points of the ultra-far-right apartheid Israeli government, repeating over and over that "our support is iron-clad." Time and again, he was caught glancing at the Israeli teleprompter to ensure he did not deviate from Israel's talking points - all to enhance his re-election prospects. 

Mr. Biden, I recently received an email from your office claiming that "human rights" are "front and center of all your policies." Nothing could be further from the truth. You have dragged our great nation into the "mother of all genocides," a massive ethnic cleansing of an entire population. You have brought great shame to our nation. If you are unwilling to demand an immediate ceasefire, I respectfully suggest you resign.


Arts & Events

THE (R)EVOLUTION OF STEVE JOBS at San Francisco Opera

Reviewed by James Roy MacBeang
Saturday October 28, 2023 - 09:05:00 PM

AUTHOR'S NOTE: In my review of this opera that was posted on September 29, there were unfortunately many errors, misnamers, and typos. What follows below is the corrected version of this review.



What I’d heard till now of music by Bay Area composer Mason Bates seemed to me glib, light-weight, and of llittle interest. For example, his Piano Concerto, which premiered at San Francisco Symphony in 2022, struck me as meretricious, hardly worth the valiant effort of the brilliant pianist Daniil Trifonov for whom Bates wrote the work and who performed it at its SF premiere. So now, as I attended the Sunday matinee of The (R()evolution of Steve Jobs on October 24, I didn’t expect great things. Well, though I certainly did not experience great things, I must say that, for the most part, Mason Bates’ pop-infused mix of traditional orchestration and computerized soundscapes worked reasonably well in this operatic tale about a Silicon Valley ihigh-tech mogul and ruthless executive. 

Although this opera’s opening —and closing — scenes feature a ten year-old tSteve Jobs receiving a birthday gift of a work table and tools given him by his adoptive father, no mention is ever made in this opera of the fact that Steve Jobs was born Abdul Lateef Jandall of a Syrian father and a German-American mother, who put him up for adoption shortly after his birth. Surely, this fact seems highly relevant to the story told here by Mason Bates and librettist Mark Campbell of a Steve Jobs who always considered himself an outsider. 

In the role of Steve Jobs, baritone John Moore presents a tormented individual, a dropout from college, a guy who was a hippie, a follower of Zen Buddhism, and a renegade with little regard for others. John Moore, who pioneered the role of Steve Jobs when this opera received its world premiere at Santa Fe Opera in July, 2017, has won praise for his “handsome timbre, unflagging energy, and an easy command of the stage.” indeed, we witness the charisma of John Moore’s depiction of Steve Jobs when the non-linear narrative jumps from the opening scene of a ten year-old in 1965 to an adult Steve Jobs making a dramatic project launch of the first Iiphone in 2007 at a SF Convention Center. Alas, the music that closes this bravura speech is bombastic in the extreme. One wonders: Did Mason Bates make this music bombastic to underscore the glibness of Steve Jobs’s over-the-top sales pitch of this new hand-held device that he alleges can do so many wonderful things? In short, is Steve Jobs a high-tech wizard or a huckster? Or both? 

 

Several other members of the original Santa Fe cast are present here in our SF Opera production. Mezzo-soprano Sasha Cooke is a radiant, vocally anchored Laurene, the woman Steve Jobs marries. In keeping with her portrayal as a potent grounding element for the mercurial Steve Jobs, 

Laurene’s music is, as Bates describes it, full of stately “oceanic harmonies.” Vocally, Sasha Cooke was at her best in Scene 16 where she tells the seriously ill Steve she loves him but cannot live with him unless he is willing to change, deal with his illness and confront his mortality. This moment was perhaps the vocal highlight of the entire opera. Moreover, on this moment hinges the libretto’s story of the ultimate redemption of Steve Jobs through the loving intervention of his wife Laurene. Whether audiences believe in this redemption is an open question; but this opera plainly makes the case for such a redemption, unlikely as it may seem in reality. 

 

Another carry-over from the Santa Fe premiere was tenor Billie Burley as Steve Wozniak, the co-founder with Jobs of Apple, and a high-tech genius in his own right. Billie Burley’s vocals are often accompanied by saxophones; and his high point was his confrontation with Steve Jobs whom he castigates for running roughshod over all his underlings in his obsessive quest for perfection. In short, Wozniak accuses Jobs of becoming “one of the bastards we hated, … a corporate prick.” 

 

Although she did not perform in the Santa Fe premiere of this opera, soprano Olivia Smith made here her role debut as Chrisann Brennan, Jobs’s girlfriend whom he gets pregnant and then refuses to accept his paternity. Chrisann is characterized by flutes, emphasizing her flights of hippie idealism. Last but by no means least was bass Wei Wu as Kõbun, Steve Jobs’s Buddhist mentor, whose vocal parables are accompanied by gongs, Tibetan singing bowls, and an alto flute. One may balk at Kõbun’s musical and dramatic portrayal as a stereotype, but it seems that this Buddhist monk had quite an influence on Steve Jobs. 

 

Steve Jobs died in 2011 at the age of 56. A memorial service was held at Stanford University Chapel, in which Steve Wozniak and Laurene Powell Jobs reminisced about Steve Jobs and his remarkable achievements. In this, the penultimate scene in the opera, Laurene closes with the remark that Steve Jobs would probably say, “Buy the phones. But don’t spend your life on them.” 

This is an astute cautionary warning. But one that apparently is ignored by so many people who remain glued to their smart phones throughout most of their waking hours. 

 

Conducting this SF Opera production of The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs, was Michael Christie, who also conducted this opera at its 2017 Santa Fe premiere and its subsequent 2019 Grammy award-wiinning recording with the Santa Fe Opera Orchestra. Kevin Newbury was our SF Opera director. Set designs were by Victoria (Vita) Tzykun, the lighting designer was Japhy Weideman, and costumes were by Paul Carey. The sound designer was Rick Jacobsohn, and composer Mason Bates performed electronics from two MacBook Pros, which were amplified in the orchestra pit.